Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 4, 2020 · Courtesy of Columbia Pictures Corporation. When the curtains open on Lorraine Hansberry’s most famous play, A Raisin in the Sun, we see Ruth Younger bustling about a claustrophobic Chicago kitchenette: waking her loved ones, cooking, fretting. As the Youngers compete with other tenants for the bathroom down the hall, Hansberry uses stage ...

  2. A Raisin in the Sun premiered on Broadway in 1959, and it is a play both about its own time and about the future. Hansberry wrote her landmark drama in the late 1950s, when the conservative postwar years were coming to a close and the radical 1960s were around the corner.

  3. In A Raisin in the Sun, why is Mama's little plant so important to her? From her very first entrance in this play, Mama is a character who is linked with her plant.

  4. Nov 28, 2004 · Parents need to know that A Raisin in the Sun eloquently portrays the life struggles of an African-American family living on Chicago's South Side in the 1950s. Characters work at subservient jobs (Walter is a chauffeur, and his mother and sister clean houses), grapple with the impact this has on their self…. See all. Parents say.

  5. George Murchison, a young Black man and one of Beneatha’s suitors, has immense pride in his social status. Beneatha says George’s family disapproves of her because she does not have the kind of money they do, and she claims the only people snobbier than rich white people are rich Black people. In addition to flaunting his wealth, George ...

  6. MAMA: Son – I come from five generations of people who was slaves and sharecroppers – but ain’t nobody in my family never let nobody pay ‘em no money that was a way of telling us we wasn’t fit to walk the earth. We ain’t never been that poor. (Raising her eyes and looking at him) We ain’t never been that – dead inside. (Act 3 ...

  7. Beneatha Younger. Beneatha is an attractive college student who provides a young, independent, feminist perspective, and her desire to become a doctor demonstrates her great ambition. Throughout the play, she searches for her identity. She dates two very different men: Joseph Asagai and George Murchison. She is at her happiest with Asagai, her ...

  1. People also search for